From owner-freebsd-chat Wed Apr 18 23:47: 8 2001 Delivered-To: freebsd-chat@freebsd.org Received: from ns1.unixathome.org (ns1.unixathome.org [203.79.82.27]) by hub.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 5165637B423 for ; Wed, 18 Apr 2001 23:47:06 -0700 (PDT) (envelope-from dan@langille.org) Received: from wocker (root@ns1.unixathome.org [192.168.0.20]) by ns1.unixathome.org (8.11.3/8.11.3) with ESMTP id f3J6l2m70554 for ; Thu, 19 Apr 2001 18:47:03 +1200 (NZST) (envelope-from dan@langille.org) Message-Id: <200104190647.f3J6l2m70554@ns1.unixathome.org> From: "Dan Langille" Organization: novice in training To: freebsd-chat@freebsd.org Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 02:47:00 -0400 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT Subject: shipping a computer coast to coast Reply-To: dan@langille.org X-mailer: Pegasus Mail for Win32 (v3.12c) Sender: owner-freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG Precedence: bulk X-Loop: FreeBSD.org Anyone ever shipped a computer from coast to coast? Actually from Seattle to upper New York state? I'm looking for a rough idea of cost and time. Time isn't important. It can take two weeks for all I care. I'd just want safe transport that's all. thanks. -- Dan Langille pgpkey - finger dan@unixathome.org | http://unixathome.org/finger.php To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-chat" in the body of the message